The
Denver Post, Rocky Mountain News, New York Times and hundreds of U.S.
newspapers frequently publish stories on legal and illegal migrants
struggling to make a new home in America. Those pieces, filled with
sob stories enough to empty a box of Kleenex at a ‘chick flick’--provide
fodder for a never ending flood of immigrants seeking a better life.

But
they never talk about the other side of the coin as those immigrants
impact American citizens. Those newspapers never talk about jobs taken
from American citizens by legal and illegal immigrants. They fail
to talk about 28 million Americans living on food stamps or 14 million
Americans unemployed because immigrants take millions of jobs annually.
They fail to tell readers that taxpayers pay for the plane flights,
resettlement costs, food, medical, education and housing for immigrants.

I’ve
traveled in Nepal and Bhutan. Their cultures feature water buffalo
for tractors and no electricity in their rural areas. They walk everywhere
along with their donkeys they use for transport of goods. Melanie
Asmar, RMN journalist, reported that Som Baral from Bhutan, a teacher,
now bags groceries at King Soopers in Denver. His wages and taxes
cannot come close to paying for the costs of his daughter’s
education in our schools. He and his family suffer with culture shock
that few of us can understand. Let’s say you found yourself
thrust from Denver metro onto a farm in Bhutan. How would you like
to drink out of a stream, plant crops by hand and use an outhouse
100 percent of the time, and no more TV or electricity? You would
never see another movie. You’d go nuts in a week! Think how
they feel changing from a farm, third world culture, different language
and family—to Denver!

Worse,
we displaced a teacher out of Bhutan that impoverishes that country
far more by taking an educated man away from his culture. Thus, both
brain drain and leadership skills flit away into America where Baral
stands at the bottom of the intellectual and economic rung. America
creates a brain drain all over the world that impoverishes all those
countries—leaving them with bankrupted educational systems and
economies. In other words, we steal their best and brightest.

Asmar
reported Colombian Josefina Castro said, “I like it here, but
I want to go back to Columbia.” Her federal aid runs out next
year. She’s 80 so she hasn’t worked or given a dime in
taxes. That happens to our country by the millions of refugee immigrants—cost
us untold billions of dollars.

Whether
they come from Somalia, Burma or Ethiopia, they find themselves ripped
out of their cultures, languages and family connections. They arrive
in the USA without any skills that benefit America. They cost U.S.
taxpayers billions of dollars in resettlement costs. They become cab
drivers, grocery baggers, lawn mowing laborers and other jobs that
require no skills other than showing up. At the same time, they take
jobs away from American teens, working poor and other Americans—who
now stand in unemployment lines, soup kitchens and living on welfare.

In
order to save all the suffering people of the world, the U.S. would
have to immigrate 18 million people annually that starve to death
worldwide. That’s eight million adults and 10 million children
that die of starvation or related diseases annually! Can we save all
of them? No! How about saving them in their own countries? How about
helping them with water purification, farming techniques and family
planning?

Beyond
the sob stories and the human misery, those reporters never talk about
the horrific impact of adding 2.4 million immigrants to the USA annually.
Each one causes a 12.6 ‘ecological footprint’ whereby
12.6 acres of land must be destroyed to support that person. The average
immigrant causes an immediate 10 times more negative impact to as
high as 30 times more impact on our delicate environment. Each immigrant
overloads our water supplies, energy availability and carrying capacity.
Those people represent a growing hyper-population load on the United
States that cannot be tolerated as we head into the “Post Oil
Era” whereby we cannot support 306 million U.S. citizens and
growing toward 400 million in 30 years.

I
invite all U.S. newspapers to write about what America faces when
our “unending growth” causes our water to run out, the
energy declines and what we face when California adds its projected
30 million people, Florida adds 18 million, Texas 12 million, Arizona
five million and every state adds millions more—primarily by
immigration. Those immigrants create the exact same disaster in our
country from the one they fled in their on nations!

Ironically,
the world grows by 77 million desperately poor and starving each year.
We cannot save them by bringing them to our country! We face mega
planetary consequences that explode beyond most readers’ comprehension.
The more we bring to America, the worse it gets for all of us—faster!
If you think I’m fooling, I recommend reading “The Long
Emergency” By Kunstler and “Peak Everything” by
Heinberg or my forthcoming book “Nation on the Brink: The Next
Added 100 Million Americans.”

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Since
the American female averages a sustainable 2.03 children on average,
everything we face stems from hyper-population loading caused by legal
and illegal immigration. Sixty years from now, if not stopped, future
journalists will write stories about desperate Americans scratching
out a living in a country gasping for its life under the load of 600
million people. We can no longer afford mass immigration into America
if we expect a viable and sustainable civilization. As it stands today,
we face enormous problems beyond most peoples’ comprehension.

Listen
to Frosty Wooldridge on Tuesdays and Thursdays as he interviews
top national leaders on his radio show “Connecting the Dots” at republicbroadcasting.org
at 6:00 PM Mountain Time. Adjust tuning in to your time zone.

Frosty
Wooldridge possesses a unique view of the world, cultures and families
in that he has bicycled around the globe 100,000 miles, on six continents
and six times across the United States in the past 30 years. His published
books include: "HANDBOOK FOR TOURING BICYCLISTS" ; “STRIKE THREE! TAKE
YOUR BASE”; “IMMIGRATION’S UNARMED INVASION: DEADLY CONSEQUENCES”; “MOTORCYCLE
ADVENTURE TO ALASKA: INTO THE WIND—A TEEN NOVEL”; “BICYCLING AROUND THE
WORLD: TIRE TRACKS FOR YOUR IMAGINATION”; “AN EXTREME ENCOUNTER: ANTARCTIA.”
His next book: “TILTING THE STATUE OF LIBERTY INTO A SWAMP.” He lives
in Denver, Colorado.

I’ve
traveled in Nepal and Bhutan. Their cultures feature water buffalo for
tractors and no electricity in their rural areas. They walk everywhere
along with their donkeys they use for transport of goods.